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Complex history between Iran and al-Qaida

By BRIAN MURPHY Associated Press

Posted:
04/23/2013 09:25:23 AM MDT

Updated:
04/23/2013 10:54:02 AM MDT

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Security officials check a man at a courthouse in Montreal on Tuesday, April 23, 2013. Reed Jaser, one of two men accused of plotting a terrorist attack against a Canadian passenger train with support from al-Qaida elements in Iran, made a brief court appearance Tuesday but did not enter a plea. Canadian investigators say Jaser, 35, and his suspected accomplice Chiheb Esseghaier, 30, received directions and guidance from members of al-Qaida. The case prompted an immediate response from Iran, which denied any involvement and said groups such as al-Qaida do not share Iran s ideology.

Canadian authorities claim al-Qaida operatives in Iran directed a failed plot to attack a passenger train. Iran denies it has any links to the two suspects. What falls in between is Iran's complicated history with the terror group that has included outright hostility, alliances of convenience and even overtures by Tehran to assist Washington after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Q: Are Iran and al-Qaida allies?

A: Relations have always been rocky. Iran has been at odds with al-Qaida on many fronts. A fundamental divide is over the two main branches of Islam. Iran is mostly Shiite. Al-Qaida is nearly exclusively Sunni-led. Some hard-line militants backing al-Qaida consider Shiite Muslims as heretics and view Tehran's regional ambitions as a greater threat than the West. Sunni insurgents in Iraq, for example, have used car bombs and suicide attacks against Shiite targets, killing thousands since 2003. In January 2011, the al-Qaida faction in Yemen declared "holy war" against Shiite rebels that are believed supported from Tehran. Iran also has been incensed by al-Qaida backing for Syrian rebels seeking to overthrow the regime of Bashar Assad, one of Tehran's main allies in the region. Before the 9/11 attacks, Iran was even more outspoken than Western countries against the Taliban, which sheltered Osama bin Laden and other al-Qaida leaders. In 1998, eight Iranian diplomats were killed when Taliban forces overran Mazar-i-Sharif in northern Afghanistan and were accused of the systematic slayings of Shiites.

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The rights group Amnesty International said Taliban fighters stormed the Iranian consulate as part of its anti-Shiite purges. A June 2009 al-Qaida memo—possibly to bin Laden—refers to the Iranian government as "criminals" and bashed its opaque and unpredictable policies. The document was among files seized in the May 2011 raid that killed bin Laden and was posted online last year by the U.S. Army's Combating Terrorism Center.

Q: How did al-Qaida figures end up in Iran?

A: After the U.S.-led attacks against the Taliban in late 2001, scores of al-Qaida foot soldiers, leaders and some of bin Laden's relatives fled over the border into Iran. Iran put many under house arrest-style detention, but refused to send them to U.S. allies, such as Saudi Arabia, where they could face extradition or interrogations by American forces. Tehran's leadership believed that holding bin Laden relatives and al-Qaida officials could offer a guarantee against anti-Shiite attacks. It also was seen as an unexpected bargaining chip with the West for Tehran's leadership, which rejoiced in the Taliban's downfall but was fearful of U.S.-led forces next door.

Q: Who were among the high-level al-Qaida operatives in Iran?

A: Al-Qaida's senior military strategist Saif al-Adel was in Iran for years with his family. He was under close surveillance, but apparently received more freedoms to travel abroad and have greater contacts as part of a deal in 2010 to free a kidnapped Iranian diplomat in Pakistan's tribal areas, where al-Qaida still carries strong influence. It's unclear whether he remains in Iran or has shifted to other areas, possibly Pakistan. Several reports he was killed have not been verified in recent years, but speculation continues to be fueled by a lack of confirmed sightings or statements. Al-Adel, an Egyptian, allegedly helped mastermind the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Africa and is among the FBI's most-wanted terrorists. Another top al-Qaida official, bin Laden son-in-law Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, lived in Iran for about a decade, according to U.S. investigators. Abu Ghaith—a Kuwaiti stripped of his citizenship by the Western-allied Gulf nation—was captured by the FBI in Jordan in February and would be the highest-ranking al-Qaida figure to stand trial on U.S. soil since 9/11. He served as al-Qaida spokesman and fundraiser before the group's leaders fled Afghanistan and possibly continued some work from Iran, security analysts say. Abu Ghaith also was given more freedoms to travel outside Iran in the deal to free the Iranian diplomat.

Q: Could al-Qaida operatives in Iran have a role in coordinating an attack in the West without Tehran's knowledge?

A: In the past, Iran kept a very close eye on all al-Qaida figures in the country. Iranian intelligence services had access to all communications and contacts. The apparent loosening of restrictions following the diplomat-release deal, however, raises new questions. They include whether al-Qaida operatives in Iran could now make trips outside the country to places such as neighboring Pakistan or Iraq to make connections with the wider terror network. Also, Iranian officials are increasingly focused on economic troubles from international sanctions over Tehran's nuclear program. Keeping watch over the al-Qaida remnants in Iran may no longer have the same priority.

Q: Did Iran help the West in efforts to identity al-Qaida fugitives?

A: To some extent, yes. In 2003, Iran gave the U.N. Security Council the names of 225 al-Qaida suspects detained after illegally crossing into Iran and deported to their countries in the Middle East, Europe and Africa. Earlier, Iran had rounded up hundreds of Arabs who had crossed the border from Afghanistan. Most were expelled, but not before Iran made copies of nearly 300 passports and other documents in an apparent effort to help the U.S.-led efforts to track the al-Qaida networks after 9-11. Iran's offers of cooperation with Washington came to a halt after being named in 2002 as part of President George W. Bush's "axis of evil."

Q: What about bin Laden's family members in Iran?

A: One of bin Laden's wives and several children and grandchildren. Early in 2010, one of bin Laden's daughters, Iman, managed to flee one of the compounds in Iran to reach the Saudi Embassy in Tehran. She was eventually allowed to leave Iran to resettle in Syria. The same year, one of bin Laden's sons, Khalid, dispatched a letter to Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei claiming that his relatives were mistreated and "beaten and silenced." Khalid was among those killed in the U.S. raid on bin Laden's compound in Pakistan.

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